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Key differences between civil and criminal litigation processes

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AI Paralegal Answer
The U.S. legal system has two main branches of litigation: civil and criminal. Understanding the differences is essential, because the same conduct can give rise to both types of cases simultaneously (e.g., O.J. Simpson was acquitted in a criminal trial but found liable in a civil trial for the same deaths). [1][2] The key differences at a glance **1. Who brings the case [1] - Criminal** — The government (federal or state prosecutor) brings charges against the defendant: *United States v. Smith* or *State of California v. Jones*. The victim does not control the prosecution. - Civil — A private party (individual, company, or sometimes the government) sues another private party: *Smith v. Jones*. 2. Purpose - Criminal — To punish wrongdoing and deter crime. Punishment includes imprisonment, fines payable to the government, probation, and in capital cases, death. - Civil — To compensate the injured party (plaintiff) and resolve disputes. Remedies include money damages, injunctions, and specific performance. **3. Standard of proof [2] - Criminal — The government must prove guilt "beyond a reasonable doubt" — the highest standard in law (approximately 95%+ certainty) - Civil — The plaintiff must prove their case by a "preponderance of the evidence" (more likely than not; 51%+ certainty). Some civil claims (e.g., fraud) require "clear and convincing evidence" (approximately 75%+ certainty) 4. Outcome / consequences - Criminal — Conviction can result in imprisonment, criminal fines, probation, and a permanent criminal record. The defendant loses their liberty. - Civil — Liability results in monetary damages payable to the plaintiff, or injunctions. Civil judgments do not result in imprisonment (except in rare contempt situations). 5. Right to a jury - Criminal — Defendants have a constitutional right to a jury trial for serious offenses (6th Amendment) - Civil — Right to jury trial exists for federal cases involving common law claims over $20 (7th Amendment); state rules vary 6. Right to appointed counsel - Criminal** — Indigent defendants have a constitutional right to a court-appointed attorney (6th Amendment / *Gideon v. Wainwright*) [3] - Civil — No constitutional right to appointed counsel; parties generally must hire their own attorney or proceed pro se 7. Double jeopardy - Criminal — A defendant cannot be tried twice for the same crime after acquittal (5th Amendment) - Civil — No equivalent protection; losing a civil case generally allows retrial in some circumstances (new trial motions, appeals) 8. Burden of proof location - Criminal — Prosecution bears the burden; defendant presumed innocent - Civil — Plaintiff bears the burden of proving their claim The same act can be both civil and criminal A drunk driver who kills a pedestrian can face both criminal charges (DUI homicide) and a civil wrongful death lawsuit. The criminal case punishes the driver; the civil case compensates the victim's family. *If you are involved in a legal matter — whether as a defendant or plaintiff — understanding which type of case you face is critical to understanding your rights and options.*

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